Re: The Fim Room: Why The Patriots Should Be So Very, Very Afraid Of The Texans

Quote:

Originally Posted by 76Texan

Did they really have somebody time every single of his passes?

And they referred to the Jets play-off game (but his completion percentage didn't suffer in that game); the Pats lost for various reasons, and not simply because of more men in coverage (it's more involved than tha.)

But his yards per pass completion went from 10.5 in the reg blowout to 5.8 in the playoff loss, and they got to Brady 2 more times. Pats went from 4-10 on 3rd downs to 5-14 in the second game. More 3rd downs, and more 3rd and longs I would presume. And the pats did not get a touchdown till the end of the 3rd quarter in that game. I mean, its some pretty damning evidence.

Side note: Dirty Sanchez went from 3 pics to 3 tds in the second game also. And the Pats have a better running game now.

Re: The Fim Room: Why The Patriots Should Be So Very, Very Afraid Of The Texans

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tailgate

But his yards per pass completion went from 10.5 in the reg blowout to 5.8 in the playoff loss, and they got to Brady 2 more times. Pats went from 4-10 on 3rd downs to 5-14 in the second game. More 3rd downs, and more 3rd and longs I would presume. And the pats did not get a touchdown till the end of the 3rd quarter in that game. I mean, its some pretty damning evidence.

Side note: Dirty Sanchez went from 3 pics to 3 tds in the second game also. And the Pats have a better running game now.

I just posted the game notes of the first half of the Jets play-off game; there's more than meet the eyes.

Re: The Fim Room: Why The Patriots Should Be So Very, Very Afraid Of The Texans

Quote:

Originally Posted by Double Barrel

I heard an interesting stat about Tom Brady on the radio this morning.

When he's pressured by a blitz and only has up to 3 seconds to pass, he's something around 70% completion.

But, when he's given longer to pass - i.e. a cover 2 defense - his completions drop to around 40%.

I think Wade's aggressive style is something that plays into one of Brady's strengths. Do you think there is any chance that Wade dials it back and tries to force the Patriots to run more?

There is a misconception in the NFL world that if you pressure Brady he will fold and lose his game. This is only true if those pressure comes from a four man rush.

I'm shocked that folks here think this is news. Didn't we learned that from playing GB? I remember an hour leading to the mnf espn and nfl networks had analysts advising Texans to limit their blitz against Brady base on their own studies of NE.

Re: The Fim Room: Why The Patriots Should Be So Very, Very Afraid Of The Texans

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Originally Posted by Pats

People here think the Texans are on the same level as NE and that Bum Phillips is a defensive mastermind.

1) I'm pretty sure most people here recognize that the Texans are underdogs, and will have to play their best game to have a chance at taking down the pats, so you obviously don't know what you're taliking about.

2) Bum Phillips WAS a defensive master mind when he coached, but he's 89 and retired now.

Re: The Fim Room: Why The Patriots Should Be So Very, Very Afraid Of The Texans

Quote:

Originally Posted by mridge01

If you believe Ridley is a better back than Foster, you're just stupid. I guarantee the Pats would take Foster over Ridley in a heartbeat if they were given the option to choose between the two. Hell, every other team would too. Ridley is decent, and a good fit for the Patriots, but better than Arian Foster... beyotch please.

Re: The Film Room: Why The Patriots Should Be So Very, Very Afraid Of The Texans

Quote:

Originally Posted by Double Barrel

Teddy Johnson was talking about those stats on 790 AM yesterday morning.

I should have clarified about the longer than 3 seconds, and much thanks to Tailgate for adding more details.

Much appreciated, man!

One of the Pats fans had a stat showing Brady getting the ball out on the average in some 2.22 seconds.

The number of times he held the ball for over 3.5 seconds is probably few.
And some of that probably on play action where usually you don't complete as many passes, but when you do, it's a long gain, or a TD.

Re: The Film Room: Why The Patriots Should Be So Very, Very Afraid Of The Texans

Quote:

Originally Posted by Double Barrel

Teddy Johnson was talking about those stats on 790 AM yesterday morning.

I should have clarified about the longer than 3 seconds, and much thanks to Tailgate for adding more details.

Much appreciated, man!

Quote:

Originally Posted by 76Texan

One of the Pats fans had a stat showing Brady getting the ball out on the average in some 2.22 seconds.

The number of times he held the ball for over 3.5 seconds is probably few.
And some of that probably on play action where usually you don't complete as many passes, but when you do, it's a long gain, or a TD.

Like I just went back and took a quick look.

We rushed 4 four times in the first quarter, Brady still got the ball out very quickly.

Re: The Film Room: Why The Patriots Should Be So Very, Very Afraid Of The Texans

Quote:

Originally Posted by 76Texan

Like I just went back and took a quick look.

We rushed 4 four times in the first quarter, Brady still got the ball out very quickly.

His quick release is pretty amazing, especially when you consider his accuracy. Of course, we're talking a HoF player here while he's still playing, so it's not a surprise.

The only way to deal with Brady is keep him off the field with long, sustained offensive drives. Sort of a war of attrition like the first time we finally beat Manning. Lots of run game, some good defensive plays, and try to win a close one in the 4th.

__________________"Football is only a diversion." ~ Houston Texans, Inc.

Re: The Film Room: Why The Patriots Should Be So Very, Very Afraid Of The Texans

Quote:

Originally Posted by Double Barrel

His quick release is pretty amazing, especially when you consider his accuracy. Of course, we're talking a HoF player here while he's still playing, so it's not a surprise.

The only way to deal with Brady is keep him off the field with long, sustained offensive drives. Sort of a war of attrition like the first time we finally beat Manning. Lots of run game, some good defensive plays, and try to win a close one in the 4th.

I just as soon try to sweet talk Lady Luck into giving us some breaks.